Where there's a will ...
Question: Ron's mom owns a piece of commercial property worth $300,000 and a townhouse worth $200,000, all paid for. The deal he has worked with his sister gives him the property and gives her the townhouse, but he doesn't trust her. Dave thinks a last will and testament is in order, and VERY soon.
Dave Ramsey's advice: Have her get a will IMMEDIATELY! It matters a lot to have a will. If your sister wants to contest this agreement in court when there's a will, then go ahead and fight. If you don't trust your sister, then this is a disaster waiting for a place to happen. Your mom should get a will now; not so you can get what you want, but so she can get what she wants. A will ensures that her wishes are carried out, even if she thinks that your sister wouldn't try anything bad. Do that THIS WEEK!







What are your thought on Revocable Trusts, etc. as a way to protect an estate against probate, heavy death taxes to beneficiaries? Also at what asset level do you recommend a trust or other plan? What if you will have a home, life insurance "death" payment etc. 401K, IRA's, BUT NO major real estate or other holdings?
assets but we have 2 children. Question is who
do we leave them to if my wife and I both die??
seems everyone considered has positives and
negitives. how do you decide?
It seems to me that you and your husband need to come to terms on what the will is FOR. Basically, I think a will is for people to support people who NEED support. If you are currently paying for some part of his mother and sister's basic needs, fine; otherwise, they don't qualify for that yet. Parents must ensure their children have the resources to get a good start in their adult lives even if the parents die before the kids get there. (To me, that happens around age 26 or so, when most people have finished 4-6 years of post-high school education and have gotten settled into a solid job. Those who don't go to college or the military still need that kind of help into their mid-20s because they have to work up from entry-level wages that would hardly sustain them. Just my view, worth the paper it's written on!)
You might set up the will to have two options. Option 1 is in force until your children reach a designated age that you both agree on. Option 1 ensures that your estate fully supports your children as if neither of you had died. Include statements setting aside a few items that have special meaning (say, your husband wants his grandma's piano to go immediately to his sister whenever he dies). Then, Option 2 says "If the children are past X, then we want the estate distributed as follows..." and if he wants his mother and sister to get half, so be it. You should both be aware: if either of them is in a nursing home type of situation, it could be very messy for them to get significant assets after their own resources have been drained in our crazy system. Get with someone with lots of knowledge in both estate planning and the long-term care system, so that if you do die early, your will creates blessings for his mother and sister, rather than problems.
just a will like you advertise from
uslegalforms.com?
I do not have alot of assets or liabilities but I want something in writing for what I do have in case something happens to me. Where should I go to get a will oniline?
Condon. You can get it from Amazon for $16. He covers almost all these questions, based on many years experience. There are many, many
wrong ways to leave money to children, or anyone else for that matter. I highly recommend this book. You will find that a visit to a
good estate planning lawyer is something you'll need at some point in the future. It will be worth the money (to your kids, anyway).
To Jennifer...your husband is making it clear they are YOUR kids, not his. He can't be faulted for wanting to leave his part to his immediate
family, but I'm sure it still hurts. You definitely need to set things up right to protect your kids. It seems to me from reading the book
that the simplest way is to create a Family Living Trust and put all the assets you want your kids to have into that trust, naming them as
beneficiaries and appointing a bank's trust dept to oversee it for them if they are still minors when you die.
I intend to do this with my family, even though we don't have all that much. The trust avoids probate and contestability and assures your
kids' needs are taken care of.
Just my 2 cents worth (I am NOT a lawyer).
Peace
Should I do anything about it in the mean time as I feel this was done in mom’s time of duress?